People's Republic of China (PRC) : News & Discussions

China Hints Its Troops Could Be Used to Quell Hong Kong Protests
By Steven Lee Myers
July 24, 2019

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People’s Liberation Army soldiers at Stonecutters Island naval base in Hong Kong last month. China warned that it could mobilize Chinese troops to maintain order in Hong Kong.CreditCreditTyrone Siu/Reuters

BEIJING — Warning that protests convulsing Hong Kong were crossing a line, China hinted broadly on Wednesday that it was prepared to use military force in the territory if necessary to retain Beijing’s control.

“The behavior of some radical protesters challenges the central government’s authority, touching on the bottom line principle of ‘one country, two systems,’” said the chief spokesman for the Ministry of National Defense, Senior Col. Wu Qian. “That absolutely cannot be tolerated.”

It was both the most explicit warning to date since protests began in the former British colony and a stark reminder of who has ultimate control over Hong Kong’s fate.

Colonel Wu made the comments at a briefing in Beijing on a government document outlining China’s defense strategy. Citing protests on Sunday outside the central government’s liaison office in Hong Kong, which protesters splattered with paint and defaced with graffiti, he made clear that the vandalism was straining Beijing’s patience.

China’s state television, which had largely ignored the protests, highlighted the damage at the liaison office, calling it “a humiliation of our country’s dignity.”

Responding to a question, Colonel Wu pointedly cited the specific article of a law detailing relations between Hong Kong and the People’s Liberation Army. It allows the military to intervene, when requested by Hong Kong’s leaders, to maintain order or assist in cases of natural disasters.

The People’s Liberation Army has for years maintained a garrison of 6,000 soldiers in several bases around Hong Kong. But China has never before ordered them to intervene in the territory’s affairs, though several hundred did help clear trees and other debris after Typhoon Mangkhut battered the city in 2018.

The new defense strategy unveiled in the document did not mention Hong Kong, but it identified efforts to divide Chinese territory as the country’s most pressing security threat.

The document also refused to rule out the use of force against Taiwan, which China claims as its territory, in the event the self-governing island took any formal steps toward independence.

It criticized “external forces” that support such independence moves, an oblique but clear reference to the United States, which has long provided support to Taiwan, including a new sale of more than 100 M1A2T Abrams tanks and other weaponry, worth $2.2 billion.

The warnings about what are, to China, core matters of sovereignty underlined growing concern about threats to the central authority of the Communist Party government under President Xi Jinping, whose pledges never to cede any territory are central to his image as the country’s most powerful leader in decades.

The new document on defense strategy — 69 pages in all — offered a detailed window into China’s rising military ambitions under the leadership of Mr. Xi. It accused the United States of undermining global stability and reflected China’s uneasy view of an increasingly uncertain world. It also acknowledged shortcomings still hampering the People’s Liberation Army, especially in the areas of artificial intelligence and what it called “informationized warfare.”

“Greater efforts have to be invested in military modernization to meet national security demands,” the strategy said, noting that Chinese military spending was lower as a percentage of gross domestic product than not only the United States and Russia, but also France and Britain. “The P.L.A. still lags far behind the world’s leading militaries.”

Adam Ni, a researcher at Macquarie University in Sydney, said the strategy was noteworthy for emphasizing the military’s loyalty to the Communist Party and the primary mission of providing domestic security. The centrality of the party’s role has been a recurring theme of Mr. Xi’s statements ahead of the 70th anniversary of the founding of the People’s Republic of China in October.

The defense strategy “makes it clear that maintaining internal security and social stability is the top priority for China’s armed forces,” Mr. Ni wrote in an email. “It is a clear admission that China’s military is oriented internally as much as externally.”

The strategy, with a title that included Mr. Xi’s signature allusions to a “new era,” stopped short of explicitly identifying the United States as an adversary, as the Trump administration did with China (and Russia) in its own national security strategy in 2017.

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The chief spokesman for China’s Ministry of National Defense, Senior Col. Wu Qian, during a news conference in Beijing on Wednesday. He said that the behavior of some radical protesters in Hong Kong “cannot be tolerated.”CreditAndy Wong/Associated Press

It did accuse the United States of acting unilaterally across the globe by expanding American capabilities in nuclear weaponry, missile defenses, cyberwarfare and outer space. (President Trump last year ordered the creation of the United States Space Force as a sixth branch of the American military.)

“The international security system and order are under attack,” Colonel Wu said. He went on to criticize those who have described growing tensions in the world as a clash of civilizations akin to the Cold War.

China’s defense strategy — and the comments of the senior officials — made clear that China had its own red lines, particularly dealing with anything perceived to threaten territorial sovereignty.

It singled out, for example, the deployment in South Korea of the American missile defense system called Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or THAAD.

Chinese officials have similarly accused the Americans of supporting the protests convulsing Hong Kong and, more broadly, for supporting Taiwan and its independence-minded president, Tsai Ing-wen, who visited the United States this month.

Although China has long warned Taiwan against steps toward independence, the language in the new strategy was more detailed and voluminous than in previous versions. The document sharply criticized Ms. Tsai’s Democratic Progressive Party for “stepping up efforts to sever the connection with the mainland.”

“While it does not look like a change in policy, there is definitely more emphasis on Taiwan,” said Drew Thompson, the director of China policy at the Pentagon from 2011 to 2018 and now a research fellow at the Lee Kuan Yew School of Public Policy at the National University of Singapore. “That underscores the fact that Taiwan remains the main focus of P.L.A. modernization efforts.”

Regarding Hong Kong, the law Colonel Wu cited took effect when China resumed control of Hong Kong in 1997 and detailed the activities of the military garrison that was established there soon after. The forces are headquartered in a former British military building in Admiralty, the area where many of the protests have unfolded.

In 2017, on the 20th anniversary of Hong Kong’s return to Chinese rule, Mr. Xi presided over a military parade that was the largest display of Chinese military force, with 3,000 soldiers in formation hailing their commander in chief. For the most part, however, the troops have largely kept a low profile.

Although the law says the People’s Liberation Army will not interfere in “local affairs,” it allows the authorities in Hong Kong to call on the military in extreme circumstances.

Beijing has urged the Hong Kong government and the police to swiftly bring to justice those who stormed the territory’s legislative offices on July 1 and the liaison office on Sunday, but officials have also expressed confidence in the local authorities’ abilities to handle the situation.

The use of force — even a symbolic display of military might on the streets outside government landmarks — would be an ominous and unpredictable turn in an already volatile situation.

Analysts said that the warning of military involvement in Hong Kong could inflame, rather than calm, the underlying grievances driving the protests.

“I think it is likely to backfire and further harden public opinion and concerns about the Communist Party of China at a time the ‘one country, two systems’ model is being called into question,” Elsa B. Kania, an expert on Chinese military and defense strategy with the Center for a New America Security in Washington, said in an interview.

The protests have already reverberated in Taiwan, which holds a presidential election in January that is, by some measure, boiling down to a referendum on ties with China.

In Taiwan, the Mainland Affairs Council responded to the new strategy with a statement condemning the warnings. “The Chinese Communist Party’s provocative behavior not only impacts cross-strait peace,” the statement said, “it also seriously violates the peaceful principles of international law and international relations.”

Ms. Kania said China’s hard-line message on Taiwan could also be directed at the United States. Detailing China’s view of the threat in a formal strategy was “intended to demonstrate resolve and a sense of the stakes to the United States.”

Steven Lee Myers is a veteran diplomatic and national security correspondent, now based in Beijing. He is the author of “The New Tsar: The Rise and Reign of Vladimir Putin,” published by Alfred A. Knopf in 2015.

Chris Horton contributed reporting from Taipei, Taiwan, and Gerry Mullany and Austin Ramzy from Hong Kong. Claire Fu and Yinuo Shi in Beijing contributed research.

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Source: The New York Times
 
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China unveiled the ATLAS strike system, which launches a swarm of drones. The ATLAS system uses ATLUSS-A140 drones from China Electronics Technology Corporation. The drones are launched from a SWARM II launcher at 5-second intervals and automatically locate their targets. It's worth noting that no air defense system in the world can currently counter a drone swarm. A single launcher can launch up to 48 drones of various types. Drones fly at speeds of up to 100 km/h and have a flight time of up to 60 minutes. Drone swarms represent a new stage in the development of drones as a new type of weapon.

 
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The unmanned L30 boat reaches speeds of up to 65 km/h and has a range of approximately 550 km.
The maritime drones operate as a unified unit thanks to their "collective intelligence"; if an intruder is detected, they are blocked. The system will eventually be scaled up, and the unmanned boats will operate alongside UAVs and underwater drones, forming a unified maritime surveillance network.

 


While China was busy shipping missile chemicals to Iran and collecting yuan tolls at Hormuz, someone was inside its most sensitive supercomputer stealing everything.

CNN reports that a hacker group calling itself FlamingChina breached the China National Supercomputing Center in Tianjin and exfiltrated up to 10 petabytes of classified defence data. The samples posted on dark web forums include bomb and missile designs, animated explosion simulations, structural integrity tests, renderings of the J-20 stealth fighter, sixth-generation aircraft concepts, nuclear submarine schematics, hypersonic weapons systems, and target analyses for American assets including HIMARS launchers and carrier strike groups.

Ten petabytes. For context, the entire printed collection of the US Library of Congress is approximately 10 terabytes. This breach is one thousand times that volume. It is being sold for cryptocurrency on Breach Forums. Cybersecurity experts who reviewed the previews told CNN the data appears genuine, matching known output patterns from the NSCC Tianjin facility, which serves over 6,000 clients including defence agencies and aviation firms across China.

The timing is extraordinary. Trump posted a 50 percent tariff threat on any country supplying military weapons to Iran hours before CNN published this story. Five Chinese vessels shipped sodium perchlorate to Iran from Gaolan Port in the past six weeks, enough propellant precursor for hundreds of ballistic missiles. China’s ghost fleet continues operating through the IRGC’s yuan toll booth at Hormuz. And now the supercomputer that designed the weapons China is helping Iran reconstitute has been gutted by hackers selling its contents for the same cryptocurrency that Iran charges for strait passage.

The irony is architectural. China built a parallel financial system using yuan and crypto to bypass the dollar at Hormuz. A hacker group is now using crypto to bypass Chinese state security and sell Beijing’s most classified military designs to anyone with a wallet address. The same technology that enables sanction evasion enables espionage monetisation. The blockchain does not distinguish between a toll payment and a weapons leak. It processes both.

For Xi, this is a catastrophe arriving at the worst possible moment. Bessent’s mid-May Beijing summit was already going to be difficult. Trump holds the waiver on 140 million barrels of Chinese-bound Iranian crude. The 50 percent tariff threat targets China’s arms pipeline. The IDF just destroyed 100 Hezbollah targets using F-35I aircraft with Israeli software upgrades the Pentagon approved today. And now the classified designs for China’s most advanced military systems, the systems that justify the rare earth monopoly and the South China Sea posture and the Taiwan coercion campaign, are available for purchase on a dark web forum for less than the price of a single Hormuz transit.

If the data is genuine, every adversary and ally of China can now reverse-engineer the capabilities Beijing spent decades and hundreds of billions developing. The J-20’s stealth profile. The hypersonic glide vehicle’s trajectory calculations. The nuclear submarine’s acoustic signature. The sixth-generation fighter’s sensor architecture. All of it, priced in crypto, available now.

China wanted to build a post-dollar world. A hacker group just demonstrated what that world looks like when the technology works in both directions.

open.substack.com/pub/shanakaans…
 
wow. If true people are really gonna die in China. CNN thinks its true but CNN is not incredibly reliable so idk. The flaming China grp or whatever should go into hiding lmao, theyre gonna get killed if theyre ever found.
China has enough money to waste just to punish this especially considering the size of the breach. Unless ofc the flaming china thing is js a front for the american NSA.
 

Russian President Vladimir Putin arrived in Beijing and received a high-profile welcome from Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi amid growing global tensions and deepening China-Russia ties. The visit comes at a crucial geopolitical moment as Moscow and Beijing strengthen coordination on trade, diplomacy, energy, and global strategy.
 
Since there is a lot of interest in how security cover for national testing is provided in India, I thought I would provide a little bit of Info on how the PR.C does it. The results are taken for Gemini (AI gen. information).

The Chinese state security apparatus acts like a military operation to secure the Gaokao.

While everyday logistics are handled by local traffic police, the People’s Armed Police (PAP)—a paramilitary branch of China's armed forces alongside the military—and local SWAT units are heavily involved in the logistics and security of the exam.

1. High-Security Transportation and Escorts​

  • Armoured Truck Convoys: Printed exam papers are classified as top-level state secrets. They travel across provinces in armored trucks guarded by armed PAP personnel, SWAT teams, and education officials.
  • GPS and Video Tracking: The transport vehicles use military-grade GPS tracking and real-time streaming cameras monitored by provincial education command centers. If a vehicle deviates from its pre-approved path, alarms instantly alert national security.
  • Student Emergency Shuttles: While civilian volunteers and local police handle standard student transport, police and paramilitary units are stationed on main roads with motorcycles. They provide immediate emergency escorts to students stuck in gridlock to ensure they arrive before the strict 15-minute gate lockout.

2. Paper Drafting and Isolation Camps​

  • Secure Isolation Facilities: Months before the exam, the selected question-setters are taken to highly secure, remote locations—sometimes military bases or isolated state facilities.
  • Complete Communications Blackout: Armed guards secure these camps to enforce a total communications blackout. Teachers cannot use smartphones or the internet, preventing leaks until the entire national examination is over.

3. Maximum-Security Printing​

  • Prison Printing Facilities: The exam papers are often printed inside designated maximum-security state prisons.
  • Armed Guards: The facilities are heavily monitored 24/7 by CCTV and secured by armed guards. Prison workers are locked in and barred from contacting the outside world until the testing period concludes.

4. Counter-Cheating and Electronic Warfare​

  • Signal Jamming: Paramilitary and local security authorities position radio-frequency jammers around testing hubs. This blocks all wireless, cell, and Wi-Fi communications to stop hidden earpieces or cameras from transmitting data.
  • Drone Monitoring: In multiple provinces, authorities deploy specialized drones to sweep the skies near testing centers. They trace and intercept unauthorized radio signals or cheating frequencies.
  • Biometric Entry Barriers: Security checkpoints at test centers resemble high-tech border crossings. They use metal detectors, facial recognition, and iris scanners backed by state security databases to stop proxy test-takers.
 
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